Niklas Luhmann died in November 1998. He had been elaborating his theory of the society for more than thirty years which has been well received in many quarters of society in the modern world. Yet somehow we are only now beginning to read him when he is no longer there to be asked. And we are beginning to discuss his work although we cannot invite him to lecture us anymore. The following article takes up Luhmann's very recent small and comprehensive book on Husserl and places him, as he did himself, in a tradition of ‘enlightenment’ which aims for a self-critical constitution of reason.